One, Two, or Five Spray Tans at Bombshell Hair (Up to 59% Off)

Rockwall

In a Nutshell

Get straight-off-the-beach color without any harmful UV rays by getting sprayed with a tanning solution

The Fine Print

Promotional value expires 90 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires.Appointment required. Merchant's standard cancellation policy applies (any fees not to exceed Groupon price). Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as gift. Valid only for option purchased.Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Bombshell Hair

Spray tanning simulates two favorite pastimes: sunbathing at the beach, and sticking your head under the mist sprayers in the produce section. Get a healthy sheen with this Groupon.

Spray tanning simulates two favorite pastimes: sunbathing at the beach, and sticking your head under the mist sprayers in the produce section. Get a healthy sheen with this Groupon.

Choose from Three Options

$20 for one spray tan ($40 value)

$25 for two spray tans ($60 value)

$49 for five spray tans ($120 value)

Sunless Tanning: Give Your Skin Some Sugar

A spray tan is obviously different from sunbathing, but it's also more complex than simply painting over the skin. Check out our explanation to learn the science behind sunless tanning.

Besides covering your body in beige post-its, there are two primary ways to get a rich, deep tan without exposure to UV rays: bronzers and self-tanners. Based on a combination of moisturizers and tinted powders, bronzers stain the skin to darken it temporarily, resulting in a synthetic tan that can easily be scrubbed off with soap and water. Self-tanners, meanwhile, actually affect the skin on a cellular level, emulating the natural effects of sunlight to create a lasting color. Available in forms ranging from lotions to airbrush sprays, self-tanners make use of a colorless sugar compound called dihydroxyacetone, more commonly known as DHA.

When applied to the skin, DHA triggers a safe chemical reaction—similar to the browning effect on bread's outer crust—in amino acids on the skin's surface, producing complex polymers called melanoidins. These polymers exhibit a darkened appearance virtually identical to the natural pigmentation caused by melanin during UV exposure. Unlike sun tanning, however, this process only affects the cells in the outermost layer of the epidermis, and since the body sloughs off millions of surface-level skin cells everyday—billions when we wear our trendiest sandpaper suits—sunless tans tend to fade significantly after about two days.